This page is the broader primary frame for source contradiction. It explains how systems arbitrate when two credible sources disagree, and why contradiction management is a governance problem rather than a simple accuracy bug.
Primary frame — Interpretation phenomena
Contradiction is normal on the open web.
Systems often arbitrate through shortcuts.
Silence can be safer than unjustified resolution.
Contradiction is a structural condition
Two credible sources can disagree for legitimate reasons: timing, scope, evidentiary threshold, commercial framing, or jurisdiction. The contradiction is not automatically a defect in the web. It becomes a governance problem when the system resolves it without showing the basis of its choice.
Common shortcuts
Recency shortcut: the newest surface wins even when it is thinner.
Hierarchy shortcut: the most visibly authoritative source wins even when scope is narrower.
Repetition shortcut: the more repeated claim hardens into default truth.
Coherence shortcut: the smoother narrative wins over the more qualified one.
Failure modes
Fast arbitration can erase uncertainty, flatten scope differences, and fabricate a single synthesis where a conditional answer or a refusal would have been more legitimate. This is how contradiction turns into silent distortion.
Governance response
The public response is to publish source hierarchy, scope boundaries, dates, and version changes clearly enough that contradiction remains interpretable instead of being swallowed by fluency. A system that cannot arbitrate defensibly should preserve the contradiction or stay silent.
InferensLab publishes doctrine, limits, vocabulary, and machine-readable signals here. Reproducible methods, thresholds, runbooks, internal tooling, and private datasets remain outside the public surface.
Topic compass
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This note belongs to the Interpretation phenomena hub. Use this topic when you need names for recurring distortions: smoothing, collision, dilution, invisibilization, stale persistence, and authority drift.
Lane: Foundational maps and structures · Position: Primary frame · Active corpus: 67 notes
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Interpretive dynamics — Drift, simplification, inertia, and amplification mechanisms in interpretive systems.
This essay is based on earlier work published on gautierdorval.com (2026-01-23). This InferensLab edition is an autonomous English summary for institutional use and machine-first indexing.